article of the week

beet paper in the window at machine project
[image: alissa walker]

hands on by alissa walker

if you’re in the business of design, or art, or culture, or urban living, or just generally going outside, you should really be reading alissa walker, which is getting increasingly harder to do, since she’s writing for so many amazing publications these days. but hey, you can start by simply reading her blog. she just wrote up a workshop she attended at machine project, a fantastically experiential art space in echo park. i often take it for granted because they’re so close and always doing so many great things, i’ve become spoiled. walker points out a feeling i share about why they’re so great: you get to experience the making of art, play and explore, and get involved in the art experience, which is a stark contrast to a view-only gallery experience.

freelancer frolic with nick carranza

freelancer frolic lunch at eaton canyon
[image: nick carranza]

last week i joined in on what will hopefully be a semi-regular event for creative business owners: freelancer frolic! a dog-friendly mental health getaway net-walking hike, where creatives can take a couple hours to recharge, connect with each other and our pets, and get into the beautiful outdoors around los angeles. i actually worked over the weekend to get ahead so i could enjoy this afternoon off.

for the inaugural frolic, we explored eaton canyon in pasadena, home to a cluster of entangling trails that lead up into the angeles crest forest. we took a trail that started along a mostly-dry washout basin, creeping up into the trees, eventually to a very live creek, and finally a waterfall. i’ve been on neighboring trails, but had no idea this oasis was hidden back here, what a nice surprise.

the scenery and exercise was a great setting to get people talking, and that’s just what we did. i know about half the group pretty well, so we were able to get a little more in-depth with what’s new and how our businesses are going. it was really nice to get to know some people i don’t see as much better as well.

once we got up to the falls, we sat down for lunch, topics turned to all our interesting food experiments of late—i love how everyone is trying new things and applying creativity in the kitchen.

freelancer frolic was promoted primarily through kernspiracy [scroll down for the sign-up link] and facebook, stay tuned for the next one!

freelancer frolic in eaton canyon

event calendar: november 8 – 14, 2010

eucalyptus bouquet
eucalyptus bouquet

we’ve changed our clocks and the official word is: it’s dark! but in the morning, it’s also light, bright & sometimes rainy, which is a lovely thing for the LA landscape. hope you have a fantastic week!

here’s what i’ll be doing

tuesday, november 9, 7:30-9am la area chamber referral breakfast FREE to la area chamber members.

tuesday, november 9, 5:30-7:30pm the valley networking mixer, autumn edition FREE! & a fun mix of people at a nice tapas bar in studio city. come meet my lovely friend, lelah baker-rabe, who hosts this biznik mixer, and add yourself to the great crowd she’s attracted.

wednesday, november 10, 5:30-8pm november LA biznik happy hour at jerry’s famous FREE! it’s double trouble for biznik this week, i’m attending tuesday & hosting wednesday. if you’ve on the west side, join myself & colleen wainwright for fall networking fun.

other events for this week

thursday, november 11, 6:30-10pm behance/aiga november meetup FREE! meet the LA design community over drinks!

saturday, november 13, 11:30am-2:30pm the new downtown lapd headquarters: architectural talk Free for SAH/SCC Members; $20 for non-member guests. join SAH/SCC on a tour of this new leed-certified gold project for sustainability.

adobe max 2010

adobe booth at adobe max 2010

as part of AIGA’s participation in an unconference room, i got to attend adobe max this year! it was a very interesting 3 days of sessions, presentations, exhibition floor walking, and poking around in the various lounges they set up for attendee enjoyment!

when i found out i’d be able to go, i took a look at the sessions to plan out my schedule. this is easily the biggest list of sessions & labs i’ve ever seen for a 3-day conference. there were often about 10 concurrent sessions per hour for the listening & overview track, and then maybe 7 or so concurrent labs for the education track, and 7 concurrent bring-your-own-laptop labs for hands-on training. the bulk of it was well outside my skill set, involving all levels of app development, widget programming, and very specific uses of different software for things i simply don’t do.

on the other hand, there were some really helpful sessions outlining new tools and ways to use them in CS5, how to design for ebooks and magazines on various mobile devices & readers, a profile of the options for custom fonts on web sites, and highlights of the best css3 styles to use now that are browser-supported. i picked my favorites, and spent any downtime i had in this super cool community lounge & retro game room to check in with the world periodically. on beanbags!

adobe community lounge at adobe max 2010

i usually upgrade with my clients, so i am still waiting to make the move to CS5 with them. however, as a veteran photoshop and indesign user, it’s just amazing to see how smart these programs have become.

for photoshop, everything seems to be related to a much more intelligent algorithm for pixel analysis. if you’re a photographer importing raw formats, there are significantly more elegant tools for dealing with noise and lens correction, even for phone photos with significant artifacting. if you bracket photos and want to merge the best elements with high dynamic range, there are auto correction tools for removing ghosts items left behind [with custom overrides for when you don’t like the default choices]. the refine edge feature for making difficult or semi-transparent selections has gotten super-smart too, allowing the user to refine a mask with simple brush strokes to indicate where photoshop should analyze pixels and include or delete data [think hair, pet fur, irregular skylines with trees–everything you’d spend hours on before]. again, with sharpening, rather than simply pulling a curve on pixel values, photoshop is looking at patterns in the photo to avoid blowing things out, or accentuating noise objects as the highlights are lightened. finally, the most exciting things are the healing brush and content aware fill. i watched 1-click corrections that were near-perfect, 1-swipe corrections over power lines that left very little cleanup behind, and removal of whole selected areas that matched around the selection’s edges while using relevant patterns in the photo to fill in a highly realistic way.

as for indesign, there are significant production workflow improvements that will help reduce time, especially for those of us who design books. some cool items included an auto grid feature, allowing the user to create a grid of regular [or irregular, with additional steps] boxes for placement in one step. there is now quick toggling between object and content selection by rolling over the center of an object, where a ring will appear, allowing the user to edit content, which is a lot less clicking! boxes now have live corner effects where you can edit corners without loading a menu, as well as edit selected corners, which is great for people like me who like a box with 1 rounded corner. special treats for book designers include the gap tool, which will allow you to size 2 items against each other while maintaining a set gap distance between them [this is critical for photos & caption boxes in book layouts], as well as the static & live caption option, where you can manage captions as metadata, style them upon import, and marry them to their images, so they move together throughout the document. this can prevent all kinds of manual errors in layout!

as for the other sessions, i got a great primer to the free & paid options for custom fonts on the web, as well as great css workaround tips for the differences in how browsers load them. designing for ebooks doesn’t seem to quite be there yet, despite indesign’s new epub export tool. other than running text, many ebook layouts still require workarounds and css edits to appear the way they do in layout, so it seems that will have to be addressed in CS6. however, magazines look downright exciting on the ipad, allowing for static content from the print version crossover to be enhanced by motion, video & animated content in the reader. gael towey‘s 20 year anniversary edition of martha stewart living premiered on the ipad, and the layout and user experience was impeccable. i was also really impressed with how many graphic styles are available and browser supported for css3, many of which i’ve had to workaround with static graphics in the past. finally, i made sure to hear von glitschka and justen ahrens presentation on working with non-profits that build community, and their experience in africa with living in abundance international. this was a very inspiring session, and it’s really too bad everyone was off learning to build widgets rather than learn how those apps can help improve life in developing countries.

20 years of photoshop at adobe max 2010

some of the fun stuff on the exhibition floor included this 20 years of photoshop exhibit, which consisted of macs paired with each era-specific release of photoshop. this was really funny for me, i think i’ve used photoshop since the 2.0 release. aah! aside from the aforementioned game lounge, there was a nice adobe lounge with swanky couches and chairs with the best wifi proximity in the convention center. there were also a good selection of exhibitors, though most of them catered to the developer community that made up the majority of attendees. not least of all were the unconference rooms where AIGA, among others, were able to engage people about our own content.

the conference itself was very supportive. all the meals were included, and we were lavished with gifts, including a motorola droid 2, and a google tv, in addition to all kinds of swag. they didn’t waste the opportunity to educate as well as infomercialize, but they kept it as entertaining as possible. i will say this though, aside from the 20 years of photoshop and a selection of ipad demos during the sessions, the apple presence was incredibly downplayed [if you can ignore all the iphones and mac books the majority of attendees were carrying]. i understand the conflicts at hand, but i think adobe should be a little more accepting of where they don’t work together and continue to embrace the apple-using community that served as most of their customer base all these years.

all in all, i took away some great info and met some really nice people. i might have assumed a predominantly development community would be sightly antisocial, but everyone i sat with for lunch was into talking and they all attended on different tracks from different backgrounds. it was also easy to forget, coming from 5 miles away, that there was an international crowd here, but i was reminded at lunch when i’d talk to people from across the country, or overhear an italian conversation in the lounge, or mistake this really nice dutch guy for a former co-worker.

now the task at hand is showing my clients how much time they’ll save with an upgrade so i don’t have to save them backwards-compatible files!

event calendar: october 25-31, 2010

leaves in elysian park
leaves in elysian park

here’s what i’ll be doing

monday, october 25 – wednesday october 27 adobe max at the LA convention center. join AIGA in our unconference room on tuesday, october 26, 12-5pm!

thursday, october 28, 5-7pm ProBono Design: Alissa Walker with Stephan Bucher, Project H Design @ PMCA free with pmca admission.

event calendar: october 18 – 24, 2010

kale with raindrops
kale with raindrops

welcome, fall rain! even though design week ended yesterday, there are still all kinds of fun design things to do, check it out.

here’s what i’ll be doing

monday, october 18, 7-9pm AIGA LA monthly programming meeting FREE and open to anyone who wants to work with the AIGA LA programming committee. this month, we’re meeting at two west in hollywood. email me if you’d like to attend.

tuesday, october 19 robert glasper at catalina jazz club. tickets available through the catalina site, don’t miss glasper on his visit to LA!

wednesday, october 20, 5:30-8pm october 2010 biznik mixer at jerry’s deli FREE! join biznik and come down & hang with us!

saturday, october 23, 7-10pm an evening with michael doret FREE! join the graphic artists guild and hear from designer michael doret.

saturday & sunday, 11am-6pm artisanal LA $10 advance / $15 on-site at the cooper design space penthouse. learn about, try, taste & support artisanal foods from a great selection of local producers!

other events for this week

tuesday, october 19, 6-9pm content without borders or how to design beyond social media with advine. prices vary.

thursday, october 21, 7-9pm a night of conversation with margo chase FREE!

event calendar: october 11 – 17, 2010

chives in the garden, happy monday
[chive blossoms in the garden]

it’s design week! all kind of fun, designey things happening, check it out at designweekla.org!

here’s what i’ll be doing

monday, october 11, 8pm soviet-unterzoegersdorf: adventure gaming, politics and future of the past FREE! johannes grenzfurthner of monochrom visits betalevel!

tuesday, october 12, 7:30-9am LA chamber referral breakfast FREE to LA chamber members, or attend as my guest [email me for info].

wednesday, october 13, 7-10pm Behance / AIGA October meetup at The Cat & Fiddle FREE with rsvp. join us at our monthly meetup during design week!

thursday, october 14, 6:30-9:30pm talkstory with jeni: going metro $10 for AIGA or A+D members, $20 for non-members. jeni herberger sits down with michael lejeune and matt raymond for a chat the creative team behind LA metro. then we mix & mingle over wine & cheese, with fantastic gifts & giveaways. come join us!

friday, october 15, 7-9pm panels: a comics panel. $10 AIGA members, $20 non-members. a panel of outstanding local artists who are inspired by both comic books and graphic design will gather at meltdown comics for a discussion on comics and design.

sunday, october 17, 12pm design week LA farewell brunch with kernspiracy

other events for this week

check the design week LA site for more fun things to do all week!

event calendar, september 13 – 20, 2010

gradient manicure
i am thoroughly amused by my gradient manicure of flat neutrals and cold colors for this week. on a week as busy as this one, it’s the little things. ha.

here’s what i’ll be doing

monday, september 13, 7pm AIGA/LA monthly programming meeting at betalevel. open to anyone interested in working with the los angeles chapter of AIGA on awesome events for the design community all across the southland. you must email me to attend.

tuesday, september 14, 7:30-9am the LA area chamber referral network. my bimonthly breakfast to connect with my fellow chamber members is FREE to chamber members, but you can drop in as my guest if you’d like to check it out. at this meeting, i’ll be presenting on how to take the “labor” out of labor and make the workday fun!

wednesday, september 15, 5:30-8pm LA’s longest running biznik mixer at jerry’s famous deli in the marina! FREE to biznik members, join biznik for free to promote your business and then rsvp to our super-fun mixer, hosted this month by myself and helen gould, and come say hello!

friday, september 17 all day park[ing] day LA! check out the installations all around los angeles!

saturday, september 18, 5-7pm gordon edgar discusses and signs cheesemonger: a life on the wedge, with cheese tasting at skylight books. FREE!

sunday, september 19, 2pm & 3pm and the whale said moby dick puppet show at machine project with linda wei and nicole antebi. FREE! i’ll be doing some character voices and puppet manipulation and hopefully making people laugh.

other events for this week

thursday, september 16, 7-9:30pm designing for the ipad, FREE with rsvp at ucla extension.

7 ways to have fun at work

7 ways to have fun at work

following a theme around labor day, the LA area chamber asked me to present to the bimonthly referral breakfast on taking the labor out of labor and making work fun. i’ve heard a lot of talk from friends about workplaces blocking social networking sites or banning other non-work activities in an effort to get employees focused on spending more of their day working. i have always found this to be a silly idea. people need breaks, they’re not machines, so if it’s not facebook, it’s going to be something else. why not accept breaks and non-work activities as part of the workday and take them back so people are happily contributing in a variety of activities?

creative brainstorming: set aside some time to work on upcoming projects in a freeform brainstorming session. if you work in a big company, take your department or some crossover folks from related departments. if you’re a small studio, select the team assigned to a certain project. if you work on your own, set up a group of other independent professionals in your industry. get everyone out of their offices and start some open creative discussions on how best to approach the next assignment or project. bouncing ideas off others can help refine them before work is done, or inform you on a new direction you hadn’t considered. in many cases, ideas are the most valuable thing we sell, so giving people an open space where they can play and cultivate them helps everyone get to better ideas.

improvement strategies: this is going to sound meta, but i think it’s important to get outside of work and then talk about work and ways to improve workflow. rather than assume you have a finished system, treat it like an evolving creature that’s best managed by allowing for change and improvement by the people running the workflow systems. take your department or compose a group of people from related departments. if you’re in a small company, include everyone. if you’re on your own, compose a group from within your industry with similar challenges and systems. for each meeting, pick one system, talk about how it’s going and let the people directly involved contribute their thoughts on improvement. allowing people to contribute improvements on the way they work makes them feel valued and engaged. they know what they do best, let them help make it better.

net-walking: why settle for the same old status meetings in the conference room or around the boss’ desk? get your blood circulating and get outside for a walk & talk meeting or department check-in. or if you work on your own, set up a net-walking group where you talk about how things are going, and set out your goals for the next week. this kind of outing takes the same amount of time as a sit-down meeting, but it gets people energized and makes everyone feel good that the idea they need to do everything work-related inside is a myth.

plan a field trip to a relevant site or exhibit: support professional development on the job with periodic group trips to places relevant to your industry. if you’re a design team, visit a design-related museum exhibit every other month and alternate with visits to print vendors or lunch with your web development team. if you work on your own, set up a professional development group with meetup or your local AIGA chapter and go to events together or set up vendor tours as a group. when you learn about the systems that affect your own workday, you can better plan around how those systems work, and work with your vendors more effectively. and if you’re just going to look at really cool stuff, well, that’s inspiring for the times when you get to make really cool stuff!

research & presentation group: rather than expecting employees to do research on their own time, make it part of the workday. whether you work for a company or on your own, compose a group that does 1 hour of research on relevant topics to work or the industry, and meets once per week to bring their favorite item to share and present. everybody benefits from each persons unique perspective, and you can actively build a collection of great resources.

networking lunches: the concept is pretty simple, but usually doesn’t get organized as a team building experience. choose a group of main contacts from a few departments, or a list of cross-disciplinary solopreneurs [2 print designers, 2 web developers, 2 illustrators, 2 photographers] , and have lunch on a biweekly or monthly basis to build relationships, learn about what each person does and expand your own horizons. you can let them be freeform networking, or pick a theme or discussion topic and address something new each time. giving people who have a working relationship a chance to know each other better outside work allows them to see the bigger picture of each person’s workday, and they work together more harmoniously in the future.

team building outreach: one great way to focus on relationships and team building outside the office is to organize outreach efforts. pick an organization you’d like to support, and assemble a team to participate on behalf of your company or industry. you can walk or run for a fundraising charity, get a group of green thumbs to help with organizations that replant green spaces, or take time out of the holidays to work at your local soup kitchen. what does this do for work? it gives people a chance to get outside their roles and work together outside structure, solving problems as a matter of consensus, and getting to know each other better as part of the process.

aside from the benefits we try to quantify when justifying indirectly productive activities, these things are fun and engaging, and make for motivated people who feel valued beyond simply their contributions to work. support and appreciation for professional development leads to self-motivation, which is invaluable in the workplace, but it starts by making room for it and letting go of the false work ethic dictating that any time spent away from a desk is time lost. rather, it’s time invested.

if you liked this article and want more like it, sign up for the parlato design studio newsletter for your monthly power shake of design, branding, marketing & promotion!